Preventing tines from becoming tangled, Warning, Tilling on siopes – Troy-Bilt 12065 User Manual

Page 20: Terrace gardening, Tilling on slopes, Before starting to till

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Preventing Tines From
Becoming Tangled

When power composting, you

may find that the tines become tan­
gled with material (tall vegetation,

long grass, tough vines, etc.).

WARNING

Before removing any debris

from the tines, stop the en­

gine, allow it to cool, discon­
nect the spark plug wire and
move it away from the spark
piug.

Failure to do so could result
in personal injury or property
damage.

To help prevent tangling:

1. While tilling, swing the handle­

bars from side-to-side about 6”-to-

12". This “fishtailing” action will

often dislodge any debris.

2. Always use the deepest Depth
Regulator Lever setting possible

(without making the tiller jump or
buck upward).

3. Till under cover crops and crop
residues while they are still green.

4. Shred or chop up any tall,
tough, or stringy organic matter
before tilling it into the soil.

5. You may have to mow or cut
vegetation before power composting.

6. If the tines are heavily tangled,
stop the engine and disconnect the
spark plug wire. Then, cut away
any debris.

Tilling on Siopes

Plant your garden preferably on

flat ground, but certainly on no
more than a moderate slope. Do
not operate the tiller on a slope that
is too steep for safe operation.

Plant garden rows vertically on

a slope (up and down the slope).

This lets you use the entire area for

a seedbed and leaves enough room

between the rows for cultivation.
You lose these valuable benefits
when you terrace garden (dis­
cussed later).

If you put enough organic mate­

rial into your garden’s soil to im­
prove its water-holding capabili­
ties, you should not have a prob­
lem with soil erosion.

When you begin to till vertically

on a slope, start at the bottom and
go up. The tines dig in more
deeply when you go uphill than
when you go downhill. As you
turn around at the top to go back
down the hill, overlap the uphill

pass by about half the tilling width.

A

Photo 4-11: Cutting tangled tines.

WARNING

Do not operate the tiller on a

slope that is too steep for
safe operation. Till slowly
and be sure that you have
good footing.

Failure to do so could result
in personal injury or property
damage.

NOTE:

When you till on a slope,

the oil level in the tiller engine

slants toward the downhill side of

the engine. Some internal parts
may not get enough oil. To pre­
vent this, make sure that the engine

oil level is full to the point of over­
flow from the oil check tube

before

starting to till.

Also check the oil

level every thirty minutes while
you’re tilling on a slope.

Terrace Gardening

If your garden is too steep or too

short for vertical tilling, you may

have to till across the slope. To
achieve best results, use your tiller
to create terraces for your garden.

Make the terrace 2-to-3 feet

wide. You can plant one or two
rows of plants in each terrace and
later till the plants under.
However, you may not have

enough room to use the tiller for
cultivating. If you make the ter­
race too wide, you would have to

dig as much as a foot into the up­
hill side of the terrace and would

end up trying to grow plants in
poor subsoil.

Start to terrace at the top of the

slope and work down. Always

keep the uphill wheel in soft,
newly tilled soil. Start each suc­
ceeding terrace by walking below

the terrace you are preparing. In
three or four passes you can create
a terrace wide enough for planting.

Leave at least a 12" wide un­

tilled space between terraces.
Keeping the soil unbroken here
will help prevent the terraces from
breaking apart. Refer to the next
page - see Figure 4-12 - for im­
portant information on making ter­
race gardens.

20

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